Law v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration) | |||||||||
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Hearing: January 20, 1998 December 3, 1998 Judgment: March 25, 1999 |
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Court membership | |||||||||
Chief Justice: Antonio Lamer |
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Reasons given | |||||||||
Unanimous reason by: Iacobucci J. |
Law v. Canada (Minister of Employment and Immigration), [1999] 1 S. C. R. 497 is a leading Supreme Court of Canada decision. The ruling is notable because the court created the Law test, a significant new tool that has since been used by Canadian courts for determining the validity of equality right claims under section 15 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. However, the Law test has since been discredited by the Supreme Court.
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The case involved Nancy Law, a 30 year old seeking survivor benefits under CPP which are limited only to people over 35, disabled or with dependants at the time of the deceased’s death. Otherwise, the survivor claimant is not entitled to benefits until she reaches the age of 65.
She appealed to the Pension Plan Review Tribunal on the basis that the age requirement was in violation of her equality rights under section 15(1) of the Charter (which specifically names age as a grounds on which one has rights against discrimination). The tribunal held that the legislation did not violate Law's rights. The majority held that even if it did it would be justified under section 1 of the Charter. However, the dissenting opinion found that the age distinction was arbitrary and Parliament could have targeted those in need better. The Federal Court of Appeal upheld the tribunal's decision.
The question before the Supreme Court was "whether ss. 44(1)(d) and 58 of the Canada Pension Plan infringe s. 15(1) of the Charter on the ground that they discriminate on the basis of age against widows and widowers under the age of 35, and if so, whether this infringement is demonstrably justified in a free and democratic society under s. 1."
Prior to this case there had been a sharp divide in the Court in the interpretation of the section 15 test established in Andrews v. Law Society of British Columbia. The dispute culminated in this case where the test was reformulated to reflect both sides of the dispute.
The unanimous court, in an opinion written by Iacobucci J., held that the Canada Pension Plan did not violate section 15(1).
Iacobucci examines the past cases on section 15, noting the ongoing dispute between the Justices. However, there remains a consensus on the purpose and approach, which he enumerates.
First, the approach must not be mechanical, rather it should be flexible, purposive and contextual. The steps in the test must function as a point of reference, not strict guidelines, and must allow for expansion and modification by cases in the future. The analysis must be remedy oriented in order to properly identify and solve situation of discrimination.
Second, the analysis generally should focus on three issues.
Analysis of the issues should establish whether the law causes differential treatment, and then whether the differential treatment constitutes discrimination. From this Iacobucci formulates a new test to establish a discrimination claim.
The test must make three broad inquiries.[1]
The entire analysis must focus on the purpose of section 15 which is:
To successfully make a claim, it must be established that the law, in purpose or effect, conflicts with the purpose of section 15.
On the third stage of analysis Iaccobucci enumerates four factors that should be considered. Their purpose are to establish if the law demeans their dignity. This must be done from a hybrid, subjective/objective, point of view. Namely, "that of the reasonable person, in circumstances similar to those of the claimant, who takes into account the contextual factors relevant to the claim."
The four factors are as follows:
This case in some respects contradicted the earlier section 15 case Andrews v. Law Society of British Columbia, in which it was ruled that differential, detrimental treatment directly affecting an enumerated or analogous ground constituted a violation of section 15, and that any discussion about the law's purpose or reasonableness should then take place in the section 1 analysis. As constitutional legal scholar Peter Hogg has written, by examining whether the challenged law undermines dignity while still looking at section 15, and not yet section 1, Law moved much of the analysis of the law's purpose and reasonableness from the traditional section 1 test, and into section 15. This means that a person who claims his section 15 rights are violated must himself prove his dignity was undermined.[2]
In R. v. Kapp (2008), the Supreme Court recognized the dignity analysis was subjective and hard to measure, and should not be used. However, the Court repeated the belief that dignity was an underlying purpose of section 15.